// Copyright 2011 The Snappy-Go Authors. All rights reserved. // Use of this source code is governed by a BSD-style // license that can be found in the LICENSE file. // Package snappy implements the Snappy compression format. It aims for very // high speeds and reasonable compression. // // There are actually two Snappy formats: block and stream. They are related, // but different: trying to decompress block-compressed data as a Snappy stream // will fail, and vice versa. The block format is the Decode and Encode // functions and the stream format is the Reader and Writer types. // // The block format, the more common case, is used when the complete size (the // number of bytes) of the original data is known upfront, at the time // compression starts. The stream format, also known as the framing format, is // for when that isn't always true. // // The canonical, C++ implementation is at https://github.com/google/snappy and // it only implements the block format. package snappy /* Each encoded block begins with the varint-encoded length of the decoded data, followed by a sequence of chunks. Chunks begin and end on byte boundaries. The first byte of each chunk is broken into its 2 least and 6 most significant bits called l and m: l ranges in [0, 4) and m ranges in [0, 64). l is the chunk tag. Zero means a literal tag. All other values mean a copy tag. For literal tags: - If m < 60, the next 1 + m bytes are literal bytes. - Otherwise, let n be the little-endian unsigned integer denoted by the next m - 59 bytes. The next 1 + n bytes after that are literal bytes. For copy tags, length bytes are copied from offset bytes ago, in the style of Lempel-Ziv compression algorithms. In particular: - For l == 1, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<11) and the length in [4, 12). The length is 4 + the low 3 bits of m. The high 3 bits of m form bits 8-10 of the offset. The next byte is bits 0-7 of the offset. - For l == 2, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<16) and the length in [1, 65). The length is 1 + m. The offset is the little-endian unsigned integer denoted by the next 2 bytes. - For l == 3, this tag is a legacy format that is no longer issued by most encoders. Nonetheless, the offset ranges in [0, 1<<32) and the length in [1, 65). The length is 1 + m. The offset is the little-endian unsigned integer denoted by the next 4 bytes. */